2.8 Understanding Gravity: Chapter 2 Forces and Motion
2.8 Understanding Gravity: Chapter 2 Forces and Motion
2.8 Understanding Gravity: Chapter 2 Forces and Motion
8 Understanding
Gravity
Chapter 2 Forces and Motion
When a boy
accidentally
drop books from
his hand.
The books drop
to the ground.
In air
The air resistance to the feather is greater
In a vacuum, both
Stroboscopic photograph
A stroboscopic
photography is a
photography that shows
the image of an object in
motion.
The images are taken at
regular time intervals.
Inferences 1
Two spheres are
falling with an
acceleration.
The distance
between two
successive images of
each sphere
increases, showing
that the two spheres
are falling with
increasing velocity,
i.e. acceleration
Air resistance
Acceleration of Gravity
Apparatus / Materials:
Ticker-timer with carbonised tape, power supply,
retort stand, slotted weights with holder, Gclamp, cellophane tape and soft board.
Procedure
1. A ticker-timer is clamped to a retort stand
with a G-clamp and placed on a tabletop.
2. One end of a carbonised ticker tape
(approximately 1.5 m in length) is attached
to a weight holder with a total mass of 200
g.
3. The other end of the ticker tape is passed
through the ticker-timer.
4. A soft board is placed on the floor below
the weight to stop its fall.
W = mg
Example
mass 100 kg
(a) On Earth
(b) on the Moon where the gravitational
acceleration is of that on Earth.
(c) In outer space [take g = 10ms-2]
The mass =
Weight, W
gravity
amount of matter The weight is varies
with the magnitude of
The mass is
constant
gravitational field
strength, g of the
everywhere
location.
A
scalar
quantity
A
vector
quantity
A base quantity
A derived quantity
Example
Weighing
Help! I am floating!
Pulley system
direction of a force.
The tension, T that results from the pulling at
the ends of the string or rope has the same
magnitude along its entire length.
(A)
(B)
tension T, is equal to
the pulling force F,
even if the rope is
slanting
(B)